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tv   The Intelligence Report With Trish Regan  FOX Business  August 29, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm EDT

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tuesday september 6th right after labor day first to cavuto: "coast to coast" here at noon on fbn and then back over on the fox news channel at 4:00 p.m. eastern. start it off the cavuto countdown is on now. send him a message if you would like on twitter or facebook, use the #cavutoreturns, next hour is trish regan. hey, trish. >> neil, that's such great news. it will be a wonderful week having him back on september 6th. yes, the countdown begins. thanks so much, just 70 days left until the general election, donald trump is showing momentum in the polls. i'm trish regan welcome, everyone, to the intelligence report. a brand-new poll shows hillary clinton ahead of trump by only seven points now. 46 to 39. you know the same poll had clinton up by 12 points earlier this month. as trump works to narrow the gap, will he be able to turn these poll numbers in his favor?
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we're on it. that he was softening his stance on the deportation of illegal immigrants. but trump supporters insist
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that his message has been consistent, no sanctuary cities, no amnesty, and, yes, he's going to build the wall. trump adviser and former new york city mayor rudy giuliani weighing in on fox and friends earlier today. watch. >> first of all, he's going to increase significantly the number of border patrol, increase the number of immigrationing agents for a specific purpose. stop them at the border and arrest the people here illegally. now, since there are 11 million, 12 million, 13 million, 14 million, 15 million, i don't know how many are illegal here. he's going to start in the right way. he's going to go after the most dangerous first and then the less dangerous criminals second. and by the time we get there, then we'll see what our population is of noncriminal illegal immigrants. trish: i guess you have to deal with that then. joining me right now republican strategist gop gts offer along with trump spokesperson katrina pearson. katrina, i'm going to start with you. how does he still maintain
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this perception of being really tough on immigration while also stressing the need to get out the bad guys but yet not necessarily going after the good guys, at least not first? >> well, you can't do it all in one day, and i think that's what we're getting here. the policy provision hasn't strengthened for mr. trump. it's extremely important to stop human drug trafficking into this country. those are the individuals who are supposed to be deporting criminal aliens as we speak. the other two things i think are really important is to end sanctuary cities and implement e-verify system so then we can make sure that americans are getting jobs. so we have to make those the priority and then after that, there won't be 11 million illegal aliens in this country and mr. trump wants to come up with a humane way so that these other individuals can go back to their home countries and get in line. trish: okay. so that's interesting. you say a human way.
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i think this is somewhat important for him because he has to get that independent voter right now. i think he has his base no matter what. and he said -- it almost doesn't matter what i do. my base is there for me. and i think they'll be with him on this one. but if he makes that play for the voter that isn't sure which way he or she is going to vote right now, there is a certain danger if you're perceived as being too tough on this issue. in other words, not understanding the challenges that a family maybe faces, et cetera. evan, it's a very precarious position to be in, he has more policy than hillary clinton does on this front, but how does he balance this now? >> i'm still trying to recover from losing a few iq points from the previous answer. trish: she answered that fairly, which is that, she wants to go after the bad guys. >> he said he was going to deport all 11 million. primary donald trump basically said what his immigration --
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his immigration policy is today, amnesty. what would primary donald trump say about general election donald trump? he would say he's giving amnesty, he's weak, he doesn't care about the issue, and that he's basically jeb bush. now it's donald trump going out and betraying his base. his base is learning that fidelity is not trump's strong suit. it's a big problem. trish: well, katrina, is that fair? >> donald trump has always said from the beginning there is no amnesty and there is no citizenship period. and the deportation of illegally aliens has not changed. >> est last week for cut backs. he said everything about immigration. >> ithey have to leave the country, and they have to get in line. trish: this is interesting. >> he wants to work with congress. >> oh, i thought i alone can fix it. trish: on -- he alone can fix a lot of these problems just by simply enforcing the current laws on the books, which we don't currently see.
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what wawl know is you have a choice in this election. you can have someone serious about securing the border, about implementing that will actually help american families, or you can support hillary clinton, who wants open borders, whose going to give amnesty. >> if donald trump were serious about immigration, why has he not spoken about the 40% of illegal immigrants who come in legally and just overstay visas. they can fly into jfk and then just not leave. nobody does any enforcement. >> go to donald trump.com, and you can look at his policy position, and he has an entire paper. >> katrina, you're doing a disservice to the american voter. trish: look, we'll find out on wednesday exactly what his policy is. i would point out that you want to talk about flip-flopping and going back and forth, evan, you have only to look to hillary clinton to see that kind of inconsistency. anyway so good to have you both here. thank you very much. meanwhile donald trump working overtime trying to win over voters in key states ten weeks
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before election day. his campaign announcing a 10 million-dollar plus ad buy in nine of those swing states starting today. here's one example. >> in hillary clinton's america, the middle class gets crushed. spending goes up. taxes go up. ones of thousands of jobs disappear. it's more of the same but worse. in donald trump's america, working families get tax relief, millions of new jobs created, wages go up, small businesses thrive, the american dream achievable. change that makes america great again. . trish: all right. going to help him catch up here, is joining him now former bush adviser brad blake man. brad, i've got to ask you. i mean how much do ads really affect things nowadays? i mean eight years ago, sure. but i think people are smart enough, they skip around a bit, and obviously i'm not talking my own book here, because we benefit from all those ads.
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but will they be a game changer for him? >> look, ads are very important, but they compliment an overall strategy. the most successful candidates are the ones to control the calendar, and we only have a few days left. there's a finite date, obviously election day. a candidate that controls a message, and most importantly the candidate that has the organization. trish: well, if he's controlling the message, wouldn't you say right now a lot more than we've previously seen in that hillary clinton is playing defense on her foundation? >> yes. trish: . trish: yeah? >> i think he's done a great job. here's the problem. a national ad buy of $10 million in ten states is a spit in the ocean. it really doesn't mean much, but it did doesn't get you anywhere near the earn media that you need plus earn media that you can't control. it's reporting. it's free media. the best advertising is the one that is targeted in battleground states and has to a certain degree saturation point to get the message out in a finite period of time. i'll tell you the ad is fantastic. the ad buy is weak.
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trish: okay. so why is the ad fantastic in your view? >> i think because it's such a great tone of comparison between what the economy would look like under hillary clinton and donald trump. it's not a -- it's not a ad that is antianybody. what it is is it's for something. and you can't always be against something. it stands for something, it stands for a better economy with donald trump. trish: much bigger, more targeting. how much bigger? >> yeah. 100 million-dollar ad buy, you're talking something that would rock the socks off the hillary clinton campaign. because 100 million-dollar ad buy in ten battleground states is abeffective ad buy in volume and in the amount of eyes that you're going to see to the attention of this ad. right now i believe there's going to be more attention in earned media than the actual ad itself. trish: we'll be watching. we'll see whether or not he can do that. 100million brad says. that's what he means.
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thank you so much, brad blake man. the 10,000 syrian refugees going to be arriving in america today and the speed at which we've been accepting syrians, i have to tell you, this has just increased dramatically. we're bringing about 11 refugees a day originally and now we're at 80 a day. why the sudden surge? have we really gotten that much better at vetting? or is the administration cutting some corners in order to meet its target? plus chaos at a major u.s. airport after loud noises send travelers running for their lives. luckily it was a false alarm. one has to wonder. is this the new normal that we now live with? and is our administration doing enough to make americans feel safe? retired four star general jack keane is here, he joins me next. i'm claudine and i quit smoking with chantix.
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. trish: the 10,000 syrian refugees arriving in america today. that's more than ahead of president obama's target date. we brought in about 2800 refugees or 11 refugees per day, but in the last three months, what do you think? over 7,000 refugees have entered our country almost 80 per day. department of homeland security says the vetting process that the refugees are going through has actually improved. but, you know, with this huge increase, you have to wonder if a few perhaps dangerous people may have slipped through the cracks. joining me right now retired four star general and fox news analyst general jack keane, general, great to have you back here in person. we have 10,000 refugees in syria right now, we want to be
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aheim be an country, we want to help people in need. but there's a certainly reality that exists right now in that isis has promised to see the refugee population with jihaddists. are you worried about that? >> yeah. certainly. and let's take isis at their word because one of the things they do do is they deliver on a promise. and that's been painful for us to accept. so, yes, anything coming out of the target area iraq, afghanistan, we clearly have to pay a lot of attention to it. i don't believe we should shut it down entirely. most of the people are these syrian refugees, the most vulnerable in that syrian society where there's human catastrophes been playing in front of our eyes for five years. so they're families largely, trish. trish: largely families but isis have used children, women, and let me play some sound for you from the administration itself basically saying that this would be extremely challenging
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to vet these people. here we go. >> we're not going to know a whole lot about the individual refugees that come forward for resettlement and vetting. >> my concern there is that there are certain gaps they don't want to talk about publically in that the data available to us. >> we don't put it past to infiltrate operatives among refugees. trish: in all fairness, that was roughly a year ago. but, you know, from johnson to call me you've got all of them saying basically it's going to be very challenging to vet these people. how did we do it? >> well, we'll find out. first of all, we haven't had any isis terrorist come out of this group so far. as a matter of fact, we haven't had -- we take in about 70,000 refugees a year for years in this country. and we haven't had any radicals come out of that who committed terrorist acts. all of that said, we still
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have to be very conscious of what we're doing here. trish: so you would not advocate more? >> i think the numbers are where they should be. and i believe now that we've completed this process. let's have the congress hold hearings on it. who did the vetting, let's make -- let's see what our process is really like. let the american people make some judgments about it. trish: do you think that's been a problem at all, general? we as americans really haven't been given that insight into the vetting? instead we hear from the likes of comey and johnson that it's going to be very challenging to do? >> well, i think in the interest of being transparent, we should put it out there and what are the challenges? what is the problem? and certainly if we're bringing in males of military age here by themselves, that should be rejected wholesale. we can't be that stupid. trish: a red flag. but europe was -- >> listen, europe is totally different. there's millions of refugees en route to europe from many different countries. they
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have open borders. there's no vetting process whatsoever. and that is why we already know that radicals have returned in that refugee population in europe. and that is a huge problem. we don't have that problem here. but that doesn't mean that we have to be conscious of what we're doing here. trish: there was another false alarm at a major u.s. airport. of course travelers thought that they actually heard gunshots out in l.a. last night, and they started running enforcement lives. this is the video that we got in sent in to us. you know, we keep hearing of these attacks all over the world now. is this just the new normal? americans are in a state of fear, i think. and, you know, you hear something that sounds like a gunshot, and you're going to run. you're going to fear that it's terror. >> yeah. and that's a point well taken, trish. there is a heightened awareness among men's who are traveling, probably in that
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sense going to a shopping mall. and in this case we've been telling americans if you see something, say something. so in this case that's exactly what happened. it turned out to be a false and a negative, and that's a good thing certainly. but i think the other thing we should step back and realize. while americans have a heightened awareness of terrorism, they also intuitively know that despite the travel they're going to do around the world and the various vacation spots and going to malls on a regular basis and going in and out of airports and train stations, the likelihood and the probability of their being an attack is pretty slim, so they just go about their lives. trish: i don't know. it's definitely a different world and sad that we even have to think about these things. thank you, general. yes, people should live their lives. good to have you here. >> good being here. trish: remember when president obama promised there would be more options and more competition thanks to obamacare? so much for that. according to a new study,
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there is about to be a monopoly on health care with 70% of americans left with fewer obamacoptions next year. we've got the details and what it means for you and your plan next.
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. trish: new data shows more than 30% of the nation's counties are only going to have one insurance option when shopping for health care plans on the obamacare exchanges next year. this is a major cause for concern after some of the largest insurance companies in the united states said they're pulling out of the program because guess what? obamacare is just too darn expensive to turn a profit. our very own jeff flock is standing by with more on this story. jeff, sticker shock in some cases and the inability to get anything. >> yeah. on the bright side there are more people insured than ever before in the u.s. but on the negative side looking forward, at least according to the kaiser family
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foundation, options are shrinking. take a look at the raw numbers on this. you mention the counties. take a look at the raw numbers. this year, about 2%, about 300,000 people only had one option. well, looking forward to next year, it's 2.5 million people that will have one option. that's about 19% of all obamacare enroll ease. and if you look at that national map, we broke it down for a bit. there are some states, five, as a matter of fact, where there is only one option. so there's no competition in there at all. in some other states the majority of the state has no competition as well. stu point out winning big health care pulling out of many of the exchanges and wall street likes that because reduced exposure, people sicker than they thought, people signed up that they thought they would. i forget what the number is,
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but that's pretty good for united health care for year to date there. there's the numbers. trish: all right. thanks so much, jeff. meanwhile as more americans prepare for obamacare, sticker shock, and it's coming. the pharmaceutical company is regal for more charges of crony capital i am of. in response, myelin, the epipen is vital to save the life of anyone with a food allergy, my 4-year-old son is deathly allergic to nuts. and if you're someone who has these food allergies, again, you've got to travel with this thing. it's extremely important. but according to reports, mylan spent $4 million lobbying congress so that its products, the epipen would be required by all public schools in the united states and once mylan got the deal with the schools, what do you think? the price of the thing goes up. now, $600 today. used to be 57.
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milmylan we should also point out a major donor to the hillary clinton, and never said boo until the fury we have seen on this thing. here's the question. how do we get all of this crony capitalism out of the pharmaceutical industry? joining me right now tanner. pleasur >> pleasure to be with you. trish: how do you prevent this lobbying effect fiscal year causing some price gouging for these drugs? >> well, this sort of thing couldn't exist in an actual free market. for example, there are actually two competitors right now that are trying to bring epee pens to the market, and their in the red tape of the food and drug administration that has approved their product yet. that guarantees a monopoly for the current company. so basically we're being
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blocked out of any sort of competition, any free market response in this country by the bureaucracy. trish: so this is big government at work? do you blame the obama administration for this? >> well, this is something that's gone on for a long time under multiple administrations. the fact is the fda is very slow to bring products to market. and therefore it keeps the competition. trish: is it in our interest for them to really vet this stuff? or, you know, as you point out, look, in europe, you know, they have multiple competitors to this, which makes it that a whole lot harder to charge $600 if your competitor's charging 50 bucks. >> well, to some extent, it's what's seen and what's not seen. if somebody gets sick and dies because of a bad product, that gets seen, you guys play it up in the media, it's going to be a big scandal. nobody wants that, so the fda is very cautious. but nobody sees the price gouging that goes or people who die because a new drug isn't brought to market. that's hidden away in the
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background, and we don't complain about that. . trish: well, now people are starting to a little bit more. but you mention the fda. sunscreen, for example, uva and uvb is very important to have both kinds of protection. but for years, you could only buy one kind of protection in the united states because the fda would only approve one. if you wanted to guard against all kinds of sun damage, you had to buy that stuff over in europe. >> well, that's right. i know people who actually smuggled sunscreen back into this country in order to get the better protection than what was available. the fact is we're very slow, and it's very expensive. people talk about the high cost have drugs in this country. one of the reasons is it's a very lengthy and expensive process that companies have to go through to get approval, and they can go through for years and then be turned down and that's just a sunk cause that they have had to bear. trish: well, the less bureaucracy i think we would all agree the better. michael tanner, great to see you. thank you so much. >> thank you.
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trish: more trouble for the clinton foundation, donors received special affairs, we're talking to state lunches, access to mrs. clinton herself, and yet hillary clinton insists this is not a pay to play operation. meanwhile donald trump is weighing in on decision to leave her husband anthony weiner which she announced just a couple of hours ago, amid one of his sexting scandals, we have the details after this (announcer vo) who says your desk phone
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trish: breaking right now, we just got word that two u.s. representatives are demanding answers from mylan, following the company's decision to hike the price of the epipen. we were just talking about this story, now want documents on what led to these hikes. we were just reporting of course that they had spent $4 million according to reports lobbying so that they could actually make it official that all u.s. public schools had to carry these epee pens in stock. and then shortly thereafter what do you know isn't the the price went up, up, up, up. we're going to get more details. you see the stock is slightly higher right now but, again, this company has been regal from these accusations effective of crony capitalism in that they spent the money lobbying and then what do you know? got the deal and then started gouging the schools. more evidence today meanwhile that suggestions hillary clinton crossed some serious ethical ties while secretary of state. new e-mails show clinton aids inviting people who gave money
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to the clinton foundation to state department lunches. and offering them special seating at white house events. clinton supporters are struggling to answer the looming questions that they've been getting, watch it. >> this notion that somehow or another, someone who supporter, someone who's an activist saying i want to come into a room, and i want to meet people, i don't see what the smoke is. >> other supporters admitting that it could not exist if she becomes president. watch. >> i think there's legitimate questions, particularly what this means if she's president. [,by the way, how do you like this one? florida calling for a clean break writing in an editorial that quote the pragmatic solution to this ethical is to do what should have been a long time ago if clinton wins the presidency, there should
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be a clean break between the family and the foundation and that includes the daughter as well as the husband. joining me now is democratic strategist hill, another hillary voter. so now supporting donald trump. and communications director for democracy america. good to see you guys.i would sae cannot have this foundation in is existence as president, why did she have it as secretary of state? >> at least the appearance of a conflict of interest. by saying that she cannot have it if she's president, well, then why could she have it when she's secretary of state? and it's clear that they're willing to take any amount of money from any third world, any war criminal be any high dollar donor willing to get their image.
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and in the middle east she took $25 million from saudi arabia, places that actually murder and imprison homosexuals. trish: as a woman, i'm really troubled by some of the countries that she took money from, given their treatment to women. but, neil, they might say, look, there was an emphasis on the ultimate good. you're helping people in the country. it doesn't seem like much of a defense, to me. what about you? >> well, listen, i think there are legitimate questions the thing about it is there's enough transparency of what the clinton foundation has given out and who they've gotten money from. but you can actually ask these questions as a journalist. you can't do that of donald trump. we don't know about how many billions of dollars russians oligarchs have invested in his businesses or what kind of exposure that he has in china that he would benefit from a trade war because we don't have access to tax returns.
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trish: we don't have access to much of her e-mails, though. which brings a lot of light to the agreements had to be filed in order for this information to come out just now. you mention -- we don't know what happened; right? we don't know that this is pay to play. but the near conflict that this suggests, i just wonder why there wasn't more of a chinese wall between the foundation itself and the state department. >> well, no question. said this was business as usual, those are just called meetings, and these are called a conflict. no, the difference is she took money from really questionable characters trying to get access to the state department, trying to get access to the white house. that's very different than somebody who's trying to influence education in their local school district. so the false comparison the democratic establishment is trying to drive between contributions of republicans and the clinton foundation is.
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trish: so here's the thing. right now hang on. we just showed a graphic is hillary honest? and 66 people answered in this quinnipiac poll, no, she's not. so here's my question to you. i mean it's like one thing after another keeps coming out. people don't think she's honest, so why is she still ahead in the polls? >> because donald trump is running the most bigoted campaign we've seen in the modern era. he's literally insulted immigrants, mexicans, you name it, donald trump has figured out a way to insult an american voter, and he's losing this election. and has ties to russia and china. this is a guy who's an unscrupulous businessman. my question to harlen is you're concerned where the clinton foundation is getting money, are you equally concerned with the money donald trump is taking from russian oligarchs and their antigay policy in russia? donald trump conducts business
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all over the globe. there's no evidence that he hasn't influenced -- we contrast it by hillary clinton. we actually know she took money from regimes that murder gay people. >> because he's reducing to release his connections. trish: i would point out. "the new york times" did have an article, and you may be alluding to this one last weekend. new york times had a big article saying that he was in -- what was it? 600million? it might have been million in debt. to the likes of goldman sachs and china. and that, you know, might cause some concern for some. but the only thing i counter with that, neil, is this is a guy who, by the way, has been nothing but pretty hard on the likes of china and goldman sachs. so he certainly has not acted as though -- >> in the case the china, it's a chance to erase a ton of debt. but the fact is we don't actually know about his business practices because
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he's reducing to release tax returns. trish: i can tell you this as a business reporter, in terms of the overall value of these properties, it turns out the 600 million is not as big of a percentage. so not as big of a deal. >> very small. trish: but it's very interesting how the hillary camp is trying to spin this away from the focus on her right now because the reality is this is not good, and the foundation cannot continue to exist if she's president and should not have existed while she was secretary of state. you know why? it all comes back to perception. we don't deserve that as americans for our leaders to have that perception of indebted to these countries or individuals. >> and i agree. >> this is straight out of the clinton playbook. if you can't stand up to a line of questioning, you escape the facts. trish: stay with us. hillary clinton is hoping to win the crucial swing state of
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florida thanks to the fast growing minority communities there. but i've got to tell you. don't count trump out there. there is an influx of white retirees in the sunshine state, and they say they're voting for trump. my intel on why florida is in play big time. that's next. ♪ [announcer] is it a force of nature? or a sales event? the summer of audi sales event is here. get up to a $5,000 bonus on select audi models. what powers the digital world? communication. like centurylink's broadband network that gives 35,000 fans a cutting edge game experience. or the network that keeps a leading hotel chain's guests connected at work, and at play.
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do you like that? a gain of 108 points, the s&p trading up 12 and the nasdaq up the least of the bunch up three-tenths of a percent. apple announcing its next event will be on september 7th. analysts are expecting the tech giant to unveil the iphone 7 and possibly a new version of the apple watch. two united airline pilots have been arrested for allegedly being drunk before they were supposed to fly 141 persons to scotland from the u.s. comes after an air transit plane arrested and charged for flying while intoxicated. we're going to be right back on more intel of why the demographics aren't stacked on dona trump
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. trish: so many people keep saying the demographics are stacked against donald trump in this election that he's not appealing to enough minorities, to enough hispanics, to enough african-americans, but what if i told you it may not actually matter? because the demographics are not as stacked against him as conventional wisdom think so, especially in florida. a key swing state. joining me right now on that very issue is former bernie sanders supporter turned trump supporter harlin hill. so what does it look like?
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still when you look at the number of percentage white people versus when mitt romney won, it's still challenging. but not as challenging as perhaps some people thing. >> no. look, the demographics in florida are changing rapidly. he's going to be in well positioned to capitalize on this. trish: because there's more retirees? >> yeah, from places like new york. so i think it's interesting. i think he does have an opening here. one thing that i will say is that that opening that he has is combined with the disadvantage that hillary has with decline and enthusiasm amongst her supporters, in particular minerals. trish: so, in other words, if he's getting the enthusiasm from the americans who are lo indicating to a place like florida, and you don't see the enthusiasm from the minority communities, that's going to be super challenging for her? >> she's not barack obama. she cannot turn out these
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specific groups. trish: it's amazing. i keep making the brexit comparison, but you think about the uk, and all of these older people in the country side showed up to vote, even though the minerals, the young people, the city folks were very, very much anticipating that they would stay part of the eu. >> absolutely. look, on twitter they call it the silent majority that there are a lot of americans out there that, first of all, are people like me who were initially afraid to vocalize their support for donald trump. but also people who just are otherwise forgotten. trish: were you afraid? >> yes. absolutely. trish: why? >> well, i was afraid i was going to lose business, which happened. and i was afraid of the backlash from friends, which has also materialized. i felt i've almost lost friends over this. trish: really? >> i'm serious. it's hostile. but the estate of politics in this country is personal now. and it's really disheartening. is really is. trish: it's fascinating that that's to your point why perhaps some of the poll data is not capturing folks that maybe felt like you a while
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back. let me share with you some more news that came out today. trump tweeted out a statement on who is finally leaving her husband. what? his third sexing scandal. writes making a very wise decision. i know well, and she will be far better off without him. i only worry for the country and hillary clinton was careless and negligent in allowing wiener to have such close proximity to highly classified information. who knows what he learned and maybe it's just another example of hillary clinton's bad judgment. it's possible our country and security have been greatly compromised by this. he obviously wasn't careful when it came to what he was tweeting out to the world. and one would have to think. he would have access to some pretty important information, given who he was married to. not giving a point here on hillary clinton's judgment on
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whom she had anthony weiner in her life. trish: she's been betrayed by her husband. i'm one of her biggest critics, but she's a human. and trump absolutely has a great point with this. it's important to know who a candidate surrounds themselves with -- themself with. because it demonstrates their judgment or lack thereof, and i think in this case hillary clinton should more closely vetted and considered the source. trish: and we've also of course reported on her allegiance there with that radical islamic journal that her mother ran that she was then the coeditor of for a number of years, including a time when the journal criticized the u.s. saying basically 9/11 happened because of the united states. >> absolutely. look, members of her family are pedaling in fiction, and in caress theory to blame as you said, blames the united states for 9/11 and basically everything we've had coming. and some of the antiisraeli sentiment of that paper is disgusting.
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trish: harlin hill, thank you so much. >> thank you. trish: outrage after an nfl player refuses to stand during the national anthem. the quarterback says this is his way of showing support for racially oppressed people in america. so is this freedom of speech? or is this is just a big slap in the face to law enforcement, veterans, and our country? a veteran himself is here, and he's going to weigh in. we're back in two if you suffer from a dry mouth, then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? well, there is biotene, specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants... biotene can provide soothing relief
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save 50% on the labor day limited edition bed. know better sleep. only at a sleep number store. trish: despite growing outrage, san francisco 49ers quarterback collin kaepernick says he will continue to sit down during the national anthem before nfl games in protest of police violence against minorities. well, i can tell you fans are doing their own protest right now. you've got videos popping up
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online of fans burning their kaepernick jerseys while several players are coming out publicly against the quarterback's decision. fox news contributor joins me right now with his thoughts on all of this. when you see something like that, how does that make you feel? >> to protect the first amendment, you can express yourself in this country. at the same time for collin kaepernick to sit like that, i think it shows how little appreciation he has for the fragile nature of this country. sometimes you think what would i do my mother would do if i were doing that. what would you do if the gold star family were lined up in front of you or veterans? would you show that kind of the you are lack of respect for that flag? listen, we all know america's not a perfect place. if we all sat down because we had a grievance or felt the injustice in this country, we would all sit at some point.
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but we all stand with a hand over our heart or saluting because we stand for freedom in this country, the people given their lives for. stand up, show some respect, and go out and protest if you want to. trish: very well put, pete. now, i understand you spoke with a former fan. >> there's a lot of former fans of collin kaepernick these days. . trish: what did he do? >> he said i love the 49ers, i used to love kaepernick. i don't want politics from my quarterback. i want my quarterback to hit open receivers and hand off when necessar. trish: we've seen this. not just athletes. but of course the dixie chicks; right? remember when they came out so against the president at that time. and they saw big backlash from people who were, like, look, i don't want to support you. my politics don't agree with yours. >> we can do that in this country. myself included, i go to
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collin kaepernick's twitter feed, it's all race, through the lens of white supremacy. does he think his coaches are white supremacy? everything through race. this is a guy with a complicated racial past. his father was white, father black, raised by black parents, if he's frustrated by police brutality, there's other ways to do it. don't pin it all on that flag, though. because there's so many men and women black, white, otherwise giving their blood for this country. that's how fans feel across this country and that's why you're seeing what you're seeing with the jersey. trish: i get it. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you. trish: more intel after this. see you in two
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trish: all right, everyone, donald trump is set to unveil his immigration policy in a speech in arizona on wednesday. there are about 11 million illegal immigrants in our country right now. what would you like trump's immigration policy to look like?
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like my facebook show page at trish intel and tell me what you think. meanwhile, don't forget to follow me on twitter at trish underscore regan. we always love hearing from you here on the show. let's go over to ashley webster in for liz claman as we look at a rally here -- ashley:we can hang up. the cowboy rally after janet yellen's speech in wyoming on friday, the dow jones industrial average up 111 points, 18,507, looking to snap a three-day losing streak. on the campaign trail, donald trump and hillary clinton, well, taking this day slow with no major events but still remarkably loud despite their absence. the billionaire businessman rolling out a new ad, hitting the former secretary of state over jobs and the economy just days before the august jobs report. it comes as few polls show hillary with a seven-point lead nationally. richard

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